Babe Jenson (renamed Hanson), is a fictional character from The Mummy franchise portrayed by actor Wallace Ford.
When they reach the tomb, Steve, Babe and the other expedition members run into Ananka's protector and the ancient mute bandage wrapped mummy Kharis who attacks them alongside the High Priest Cult of Karnak led by Professor Andoheb.
In The Mummy's Tomb, set 30 years after the previous film, Babe is now an elderly man who comes to Steve's hometown of Mapleton, Massachusetts for his funeral and finds out that Steve died by getting strangled to which he realizes that the mummy Kharis has come back to take his revenge alongside the High Priests.
The next day, Babe is at the local hotel pub drinking and rattling Poopsie to wish him luck whilst Steve comes by and says that everybody who he asked to help finance and join the expedition has said no which causes the 2 to ponder how it's going to go for them.
Babe also says that he is from New York as well and him and Steve then talk about the expedition with Solvani agreeing to finance it however their conversation is interrupted by a few of Andoheb's spies attacking the 3 led by the Cairo Beggar.
That night, Babe is happily sitting in his chair telling Poopsie that the money is coming to them until all of a sudden, somebody knocks the hotel room door.
Once they arrive there, Babe accidentally dynamites some rocks which opens a cave and makes all of the Egyptian workers run alongside Ali.
As it finally comes to midnight, Babe does more tricks with Solvani and jokes about how he could easily make money for them, also saying if they could ever even find Ananka's tomb whilst Steve tells him that he figured out the key to were it is along with Marta.
Babe tries his best to fight the mummy, even grabbing a wooden log and hitting him with it but fails and is subsequently strangled to death by Kharis.
Babe's death would ultimately be the third member of the Banning family or friends (who was on the 1912 Egypt expedition) to be slain by Kharis to get revenge for what happened in 1912.